Extra shots
[Dave Birch] The number of times I've found myself enraged by the expense of wifi -- in a hotel, at a train station, wherever -- is huge, but I think becoming slightly rarer. Apart from hotels, where the wifi charges are absolutely ridiculous, the situation is improving. I'm still curious, though, why free wifi isn't more widespread.
I usually go to Starbucks because the company offers free, unlimited Wi-Fi
[From Tech Leaders: Google, Apple, and...Starbucks? — Datamation.com]
I tend to do this too. I think I prefer Caffe Nero coffee at the moment, and they have contactless payment terminals too (which ought to work faster than cash, but don't, because of the way they are configured), but because I have a Starbucks card I can sit and get some work done using the free wifi. I really don't understand why all coffee shops don't just provide free wifi and be done with it and then get back to competing on coffee. Although I suppose there are other things to compete on still.
At my own local Starbucks, they've recently remodeled the store to add more and bigger desks, and dozens of outlets. Rather than encourage people to pay and leave, as have many big chains, Starbucks clearly encourages loitering
[From Tech Leaders: Google, Apple, and...Starbucks? — Datamation.com]
The theory, presumably, is that other than at peak times there is always room to sell another cup, a piece of cake, a biscuit for people who want to stop and work/read/relax. The next logical step would be to have iPads built in to the tables for people who want to read the news and browse around. Presumably it would be cheaper to negotiate a global deal with News International instead of messing about printing, delivering and returning copies of the The Times. (Like many people, I'm sure, I pick up my copy to read in the queue and while I'm waiting for my coffee, but I never buy it and leave it at the pick-up point.).
In the future, everyone will be famous for fifteen megabytes